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  • A Sailor of Austria

  • The Otto Prohaska Novels, Book 1
  • Written by: John Biggins
  • Narrated by: Nigel Patterson
  • Length: 13 hrs and 33 mins
  • 5.0 out of 5 stars (5 ratings)

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A Sailor of Austria

Written by: John Biggins
Narrated by: Nigel Patterson
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Publisher's Summary

In which, without really intending to, Otto Prohaska becomes official war hero no. 27 of the Habsburg empire.

"A retro techno-adventure story that falls somewhere between Tom Clancy and Patrick O'Brian... top notch military fiction with a literary flair." (Publishers Weekly)

In the spring of 1915, a young Austro-Czech naval lieutenant Ottokar Prohaska finds himself posted to the minuscule Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Submarine Service in the Adriatic port of Pola. In some trepidation at first, because he has no experience whatever of submarines, his fears are soon set at rest when he discovers that nobody else has either: least of all his superiors. There follow three and a half years of desperate World War One adventures fighting for the House of Habsburg aboard primitive, ill-equipped vessels, contending not just with exploding lavatories and the transport of Libyan racing camels but with a crew drawn from a dozen different nationalities-and a decaying imperial bureaucracy which often seems to be even more of an enemy than the British, the French, the Italians and the sea itself.

After surmounting all this to become - accidentally - Austria Hungary's leading U-boat commander and a holder of its highest military decoration, the closing months of 1918 see him and his crew returning aboard a damaged boat from the shores of Palestine, only to find that the homeland they have fought for so doggedly over the previous four years is now in the final stages of collapse, and that they themselves are effectively stateless persons; sailors without a navy returning to a country which no longer has a coastline.

"Fresh, vivid, and without peer in the current market." (Booklist)

"Stark realism and finely crafted humor.... Biggins's use of narration, his thorough knowledge of the Adriatic, and good technical detail make this... compelling reading." (Library Journal)

©1991 John Biggins (P)2017 McBooks Press, Inc.

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Quite delightful.

I was immediately drawn in by the narrator's demeanour - charming and dryly witty, but never arrogant or smug. Several people have compared this, favourably or otherwise, to Fraser's Flashman books, and I do see the connection, but I must say I like Otto Prohaska immensely, and would love to have made his acquaintance, something I could never say for Flashman.

Some have also objected to this tale's plotting, or lack thereof, but I can't see why. It's a memoir, and therefore by nature episodic. There are some terrifically funny episodes, some tensely suspenseful, and some quite bleakly sad. Otto's wry observations provide a through line that I found most entertaining.

The book is read by Nigel Patterson, who I thought did a superb job of creating various characters with a wide variety of accents. I particularly liked the young handyman's Welsh accent, which flowed so fluently. I'm an actor and I like doing accents, but I generally need a bit of time to settle into one. I am frequently in awe of audiobook narrators who flip so entirely from one to another without pause.

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